docs/start-server.js

54 строки
1.8 KiB
JavaScript

import dotenv from 'dotenv'
import './lib/check-node-version.js'
import './lib/handle-exceptions.js'
import portUsed from 'port-used'
import createApp from './lib/app.js'
import warmServer from './lib/warm-server.js'
import http from 'http'
dotenv.config()
const { PORT, NODE_ENV } = process.env
const port = Number(PORT) || 4000
export async function main() {
if (NODE_ENV !== 'production') {
await checkPortAvailability()
}
return await startServer()
}
async function checkPortAvailability() {
// Check that the development server is not already running
const portInUse = await portUsed.check(port)
if (portInUse) {
console.log(`\n\n\nPort ${port} is not available. You may already have a server running.`)
console.log(
`Try running \`npx kill-port ${port}\` to shut down all your running node processes.\n\n\n`
)
console.log('\x07') // system 'beep' sound
process.exit(1)
}
}
async function startServer() {
const app = createApp()
// Warm up as soon as possible.
// The `warmServer()` function is idempotent and it will soon be used
// by some middleware, but there's no point in having a started server
// without this warmed up. Besides, by starting this slow thing now,
// it can start immediately instead of waiting for the first request
// to trigger it to warm up. That way, when in development and triggering
// a `nodemon` restart, there's a good chance the warm up has come some
// way before you manage to reach for your browser to do a page refresh.
await warmServer()
// Workaround for https://github.com/expressjs/express/issues/1101
const server = http.createServer(app)
return server
.listen(port, () => console.log(`app running on http://localhost:${port}`))
.on('error', () => server.close())
}